178 Iowa 1235 | Iowa | 1916
Some time thereafter, and prior to March 1, 1913 (the actual date not appearing here), the plaintiff instituted an action to set aside the probate of the will of Margaret McHugh, on the ground of her alleged mental incompetency and on the ground of alleged undue influence of Hedrick, the principal beneficiary of her will. The petition also attacked the certain contract of settlement between Hedrick and Robert Leroy Hoover already referred to, and alleged that the same was obtained from Hedrick by Robert Leroy Hoover upon the false and fraudulent representations that he was an heir of Mrs. McHugh’s, whereas he was, in fact, not such, and the petition prayed that such contract be set
The answering defendants attached various interrógate-' ries to their pleadings. The plaintiff purported to answer these. Some of these will be set forth herein later. The plaintiff answered therein that his father’s name was Richard G. Hoover, and that he was the son of Pembroke Hoover and Margaret Simmons Hoover, -and that he lived in Cedar County, Iowa. Mrs. McHugh’s maiden name was Simmons, her first husband was Pembroke Hoover, and her home was Cedar County. Answering one of the interrogatories, the plaintiff stated as follows:
“A. 8. A Bible kept by my grandfather, Pembroke Hoover, shows- the birth of my father, Richard 6. Hoover, to him and Margaret Simmons Hoover, in pen and ink.”
A motion was filed by the defendants for an order requiring the production of tho record above referred to. Over the resistance of the plaintiff, such order was,entered. A month later, such order having been wholly ignored by the plaintiff, a rule was issued ordering him to show cause why he had not complied with the order of the court. A further
Reference should be made here to certain other proceedings had before the striking of plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiff had, by various pleadings, including a demurrer, resisted the filing of the counterclaims, on the general ground that they were not germane to the issue tendered by the petition, and that they could not be interposed in an action at law to set aside the probate of a will, and that their filing was an attempt to deprive the plaintiff of the right of jury trial, and to force the trial to the equity side. The court allowed the counterclaims to stand, but ordered that the equitable issues therein should be tried in equity, and that the issue as to the setting aside of the probate of the will should be tried at law, and should be first tried, if tried, at the following term. At the final trial of the equitable issues on the counterclaims, the trial court found that the plaintiff had no interest in the litigation, in that he sustained no relationship whatever to Mrs. McHugh. A decree quieting title against him was entered in favor of the counterclaimants. The general nature of the complaint made by the appellant on this appeal is that the trial court acted in excess of its jurisdiction, in dismissing the petition for the alleged contemptuous conduct of the plaintiff; that its only power was to continue until compliance with its order was had; that the court erred in entertaining jurisdiction of the counter
I. Before proceeding to a consideration of the points and argument of appellant, we deem it appropriate to look at the facts of the case pertaining to plaintiff’s interest in the litigation, as these facts were developed by proceedings subsequent to the dismissal of his petition, which led to the final decree. The tidal court never lost personal jurisdiction over the plaintiff, however erroneous its procedure, if at all. Indeed, the plaintiff continued to be represented by his counsel at all stages of the proceedings, including the tailing of important depositions where full cross-examination was had. When the final trial was reached., counsel for plaintiff asked for an abatement of this branch of the case until a trial could be had on the law issue tendered in the former petition. This was refused by the court, and the trial proceeded. The record discloses that at this point plaintiff’s attorneys left the court room. This action on their part could not, of course, defeat the jurisdiction of,the court over the person of the plaintiff. If it was properly found that the plaintiff sustained no relationship to Mrs. McHugh, then he has no right to pursue his purported litigation, or to submit any issue either to jury or to court. In other words, his identity or relationship to Mrs. McHugh stands at the threshold of his right to litigate at all, not only the questions of fact, but questions of law and procedure as well.
“A. 1. My'full name is Stuart Isaac Hoover.
“A. 2. I was bom December 1st, 1884, in Eau Claire County, Wisconsin.
“A. 3. There was no public record kept of my birth to my knowledge.
“A. 4. There was no private record preserved of my birth to my knowledge.
• “A. 5. The full name of my father was Richard G. Hoover.
“A. 6. I do not know when my father was born; he was born about 1860.
“A. 7. I don’t know of any public record of my father’s birth.
“A. 8. A Bible kept by my grandfather, Pembrook Hoover, shows the birth of my father, Richard G. Hoover, to him and Margaret Simmons Hoover, in pen and ink.
“A. 9. I do not know when nor where my father and mother were married.
“A. 10. I do not know full maiden name of my mother.
“A. 11. I do not know when and where my mother was born, nor do I know the name of her father or mother, nor do I know their address and I cannot say whether they are dead or living.
“A. 12. I do not know the names of my mother’s brothers and sisters, nor do I know their addresses.
“A. 13. I do not know of any uncles and aunts of my mother who are living, nor do I know their residences.
“A. 14. My father and mother died about 1891, in a forest fire in Wisconsin. I remember seeing the fire at the time.
“A. 15. There is no tombstone or monument erected to the memory of my father and mother, to my knowledge.
“A. 16. I have lived in Wahoo, Saunders County, Ne*1242 braska, about eight months, and I lived there with William Hilliard, but I do not know his present address; and I lived in Beatrice, Gage County, Nebraska, about eight months, and lived with William Hilliard, but I do not know his present address; and I lived in Goodland, Kansas, about four months, with William Hilliard, but I do not know his present address; and I lived in St. Joe, Buchanan County, Missouri, about one and one:half years, and I boarded at different boarding houses, the names of which I do not remember,' but they were located in South St. Joe, Missouri. And I lived in Kansas City, Missouri, about five years, and while there I boarded at different boarding houses, and worked at such labor as I could obtain; and it is so long ago since I left Kansas City, Missouri, that I cannot recall the name or names of any of the people who kept the boarding houses at which I boarded; and I lived in the state of Wyoming about two years, engaged in working on the Union Pacific Railroad, on its line through the state, and I boarded at the different railway camps along the railway through the state; and at the time I did not know, and ’do not know, the names of the different counties in which I worked along said line of railway, and I cannot recall the name or names of any of the persons that I worked with, for the reason that the persons were of different nationalities, and the most of whom could not speak the English language, and we were strangers to each other. And then I worked in the harvest fields in Kansas for one season among strangers. I do not know their names; and then I worked on a.truck farm, two years, at East Peoria, Illinois. I lived with a person named Jacob Hihouse. I do not know his present address. And then I went to Dane County, Wisconsin, and worked with a threshing machine crew one' season, and lived with a man by the name of - Bacon. I do not know his given name, nor do I know his address. Then I went to Spring Green, Wisconsin, and lived there two years, engaged in real estate business*1243 and farming, and I boarded at a hotel. Mr. L. Lawson, who kept the hotel, sold out and left the place, and I do not know his present address. Then I went to Richland Center, Wisconsin, where I am now living.
“A. 17. I do not know the names of the places at which my father lived, bnt he worked in different lumber camps in Wisconsin, nor do I know the names of the people for whom he worked.
“A. 18. William Hilliard Imew my father during his lifetime; George Signer knew my father in his lifetime. Isaac Lynberger knew my father in his lifetime, and Chris Scholl also knew my father in his lifetime.
. * “A. 19. The address of William Hilliard was Good-land, Kansas; the address of George Signer is Spooner, Wisconsin; the address of Chris Scholl is Chicago, Illinois; and the address of Isaac Lynberger is Minneapolis, Minnesota.
“A. 20. Yes.
“A. 21. Thomas Northrup, of Ida Grove, Iowa, as I am informed and believe.
“A. 22. I d,o not know the names and present addresses of uncles, brothers, sisters, aunts and cousins of my mother.
“A. 23. Nobody took care of me after the death of my father and mother until I attained my majority, excepting William Shouse, for a period of about three years, and William Shouse and his wife were living at lumber camps in Wisconsin, during the three years that they took care of me, and their last known address to me was a lumber camp in Chippewa County, Wisconsin.”
To certain interrogatories attached to the pleading of Robert Leroy Hoover, plaintiff answered as follows:
“Int. 17. What was the name of your grandfather on your father’s side? A. Pembroke Hoover, and he married Margaret Simmons in Cedar County, Iowa, so I am informed and believe, and also that she lived with him for about five*1244 years, and' about three years afterward, she, Margaret Hoover, mkrried one Alex McHugh, deceased, late of Ida County, Iowa.
“Int. 18. Where was he born, and when? A. I do not know where Pembroke Hoover was bom, nor when he was born.
“Int. 19. Where did he die, and when? A. He died about thirty-eight years ago, but I do not know the name of the place where he died.
“Int. 20. How many times was your grandfather on your father’s side married, during his lifetime, and what were the names of his various wives, if more than one, before they were married to him? A. I have been informed and believe that he was married twice; the first time to Margaret Simmons; the second time to a woman whose maiden name I do not know. She is now residing in the state of Oregon.
“Int. 21. How many children did your grandfather on your father’s side have, and what were their names and ages? A. My grandfather on my father’s side had two sons, as issue of his marriage to Margaret Simmons, she having afterward married Alex McHugh, deceased. The name of one son was Richard G. Hoover, my father, who was born about I860; the name of the other son I do not know, nor the year of his birth. This answer is made on information and belief, and I therefore believe the same to be true.
£ £ Int. 22. Did you ever know your grandfather on your father’s side, personally, and if so, when and where did you see- him ? A. I did not know my grandfather on my father’s side, personally; I never saw him.
“Int. 23. Give-the various places in which your names of the people with whom he lived and for whom he worked ? A. I do not know where my father lived previous to his marriage, nor do I know the names of the people with whom he lived, and for whom he worked.
*1245 “Int. 24. What was the color of your father’s eyes? A. I do not remember the color of my father’s eyes.
“Int. 25. What was the color of your father’s hair? A. I do not remember the color of my father’s hair.
“Int. 26. Did your father have a finger missing on either hand? A. I have no recollection as to that and do not know.
“Int. 27, Did your father ever live in Cadillac, Michigan, and if so, when and with whom did he live, and how long did he live with such person? A. I'do not know of my father ever living at Cadillac, Michigan.
‘ ‘ Int. 28. How large a man was your father, i. e., how many feet tall was he, and how many pounds did he weigh? A. I do not know how many feet tall my father was, nor how much he would weigh.
“Int. 29. Where is the body of your father buried? A. The body of my father was burned up in a forest fire in the state of Wisconsin.
“Int. 30. Is there a tombstone or monument erected to the memory of your father, and if so, where is it, aiid when was it erected? A. There is no tombstone or monument erected to the memory of my father, to my knowledge.”
It will be noticed from the foregoing that no information is contained as to the present whereabouts of any person who could connect the plaintiff either as the son of Richard G. Hoover or as the grandson of Pembroke .and Margaret Hoover. Some months later, he answered further interrogatories as follows:
“A. 1. I know that I was born in Eau Claire • Co., Wisconsin, on December 1, 1884, because William Hilliard, who resided at Goodland, Kansas, told me that I was born on that date and at that place.
“A. 2. I only lmow of but said William Hilliard, who knew when and where I was born. He told me that I was the only child born to my father and mother, and his last known address to me was Goodland, Kansas.
*1246 "A. 3. Since I filed my answers to the previous interrogatories, I have not talked or communicated with any person or persons who knew the time and place of my birth.
“A. 4. I do not know of any person who was present at my birth.
“A. 5. All that I know about my*birth is what said William Hilliard told me, as stated in my answer to said Interrogatory 1.
“A. 6. I don’t know in whose house I was born,
“A. 7. Since the filing of my answers to the previous interrogatories, I have not learned any additional facts in regard to my mother.
“A. 8. I have answered this interrogatory in my answer to said Interrogatory 7.
“A. 9. I do not know at this time the name of my mother before she married my father.
‘ ‘ A. 10. I do not know the name or names of any relative of my mother.
“A. 11. My father and mother did die in a forest fire about 1891 in Wisconsin, but I d° not lmow the exact location of the fire.
“A. 12. George Signer, deceased, late of Spooner, Wisconsin, and William Hilliard, whose last known address to me was Goodland, Kansas, personally knew of the fire in which my father and mother were burned to death, and they knew of their deaths.
“A. 13. I personally saw the fire when my father and mother were burned to death in it.
“A. 14. I was not rescued from the fire by anyone.
“ A. 15. I knew of the death of my father and mother in the said forest fire, because I was personally present at the time of the fire in which my parents were burned to death, and I personally saw the fire.
“A. 16. After said fire I did not remain in the vicinity, of the fire, and nobody took me from said fire.
“A. 17. I do remember my father and mother, but I*1247 do not remember how they looked; and the place I last saw them was before said forest fire.
“A. 18. I have not pictures of my father and mother.
“A. 19. As I have stated in my answer to Interrogatory 18, I have no pictures of my father or mother.
“A. 20. I answer this interrogatory by my answers to said Interrogatories 18 and 19.
"A. 21. I have no pictures of my grandfather Pembroke Hoover, on my father’s side. •
“A. 22. Since the filing of my answers to the former interrogatories asked by the defendant Eobert Leroy Hoover, I have not talked to or communicated with any person or persons who knew of the fact of the fire in which my father and mother perished.
“A. 23. Since the filing of my answers to the former interrogatories asked by the defendant Eobert Leroy Hoover, I have not talked to or communicated with William Hilliard, Isaac Lynberger, Chris Scholl, William Shouse, or Jacob Hihouse, or any of them.
“A. 24. William Hilliard and his wife, William Shouse and his wife, Isaac Lynberger and his wife, Chris Scholl, and George Signer are persons that I remember of knowing my father and mother after their marriage.
“A. 25. Since the bringing of this action I have not personally communicated by letter or otherwise with any persons who knew either my father or my mother.
“A. 26. I do not remember when the last time was that I saw or heard from William Shouse or his wife.
“A. 27. Since filing my answer to Interrogatory 23 of defendant D. H. Hedrick, I have not communicated personally with said William Shouse or his wife or any of his family.
“A. 28. I attended school at Wahoo, Saunders Co., Nebraska. The next place that I attended school was Good-land, Sherman County, Kansas, and I was living with William Hilliard at the times when I attended these schools.
*1248 “A. 29. I first attended school at Wahoo, Saunders Co., Nebraska. I lived at that time with William Hilliard, whose last known address to me was Goodland, Kansas. I attended said school about six months, and I do not remember the name of the school teacher.
“A. 30. I do not personally know the present address of said William Hilliard or of the school teacher who taught the school.
“A. 31. I* only went to school to two teachers, and I do not remember the name of either one of them. I don’t know their place 'or places of residence, and cannot state their address or addresses. When I went to those teachers I was only about nine years of age, and I have not gone to school'since that time.”
Notwithstanding the mist that, according to his answers, appeared to hang over the life of the plaintiff, and to shut him off from the view of many acquaintances, the appellees claim to have found the nest wherein he was born, at Ferris, Illinois, and a number of depositions were taken and introduced in evidence in proof of such fact. The two following depositions are sufficiently illustrative of all on this point: “F. N. Casburn:
“My name is F. N. Casburn. I am 38 years old, and I live in Ferris, 111. My business is banking. I have lived in and around Ferris all my life. I Imow S. I. Hoover, or Stuart Isaac Hoover; I have known him for 20 years. He lived in and near F'erris, 111., most of the time. I have ex-examined ‘ Exhibit A, ’ which is a photograph handed to me by the notary taking .this deposition. ‘Exhibit A’ is a photograph of Stuart Isaac Hoover, the man to whom I have just referred. The father of Stuart Isaac Hoover, or, as he was generally known, S. I. Hoover, was John A. Hoover, and his mother’s name was Sarah E. Hoover. Stuart Isaac Hoover has been married and divorced. The maiden name of his wife was Adelaide Davis. I do not call to mind her present address, but it is near Carthage, 111. The mother of Stuart*1249 Isaac Hoover, Sarah. E. Hoover, lives at Adrian, 111. Stuart Isaac Hoover, or, as he was generally known, S. I. Hoover, had four brothers and two sisters, viz.: Harry Hoover, of Seattle, Wash.; John W. Hoover, of Lamont, 111.; Albert Hoover, of Ferris, 111.; Florence Emmert, of Des Moines, Iowa; Mrs. Elsie Scott, of Adrian, 111.; and George J. Hoover, of Lomax, 111. I do not know just where Stuart Isaac Hoover has lived the last 3 or 4 years, but it was somewhere in Wisconsin. I have written to him at Madison, Wis., and at Spring Green, Wis. In 1909, he was in Ferris, 111., assisting in disposing of his father’s estate. I think he has been a traveling man of some kind within the last four years.
Cross-Examination.
“I have known the family of Stuart Isaac Hoover for 20 years. The picture ‘Exhibit A,’ which I have heretofore identified, is certainly a picture of the man about whom I have been testifying. I knew his father and his mother personally. The family has lived in and about Ferris, 111., for many years. His father is dead, and died, I think, of heart trouble; he certainly was not burned in any forest fire in Wisconsin.”
‘‘F. C. Scott:
‘‘My name is Frank C. Scott. I am 29 years old, and I reside at Adrian, 111. I am by profession a physician. I know S. I. Hoover, or Stuart Isaac Hoover, and have known him for about 15 years. Up to' about four years ago, he lived in and around Ferris, 111. I have examined the photograph handed me by the notary public, which is marked ‘ Exhibit A, ’ and that photograph is a picture of Stuart Isaac Hoover, about whom I have just testified. It is certainly a picture of him. His father’s name is John A. Hoover, and his mother’s name is Sarah E. Hoover. His father is dead, but his mother is living. I know the family very well. He had four brothers and two sisters. I do not know just where*1250 S. I. Hoover, or Stuart Isaac Hoover, has lived., the last four years, but it was somewhere in Wisconsin. He left here in Nov., 1909, and his address after that was Madison, Wis., and Spring Green, Wis.
Cross-Examination.
“I am a brother-in-law of this Stuart Isaac Hoover; I therefore know him very well. I know it to be a fact that he wrote from Spring Green, Wis., and also wrote from Madison, Wis. ■ The man is about 30 years old. He is a man of light complexion, and light hair. There can’t be any doubt about the picture ‘Exhibit A’ being a picture of the man about whom I am testifying, and his name is Stuart Isaac Hoover. ’ ’
Substantially the same matters were testified to in the depositions' of several other witnesses, residents of the same locality. These included an uncle of Stuart Isaac Hoover’s, a brother of his father’s; also the attorney for the administrator of his father’s estate, to whom Stuart Isaac Hoover receipted for his share of the estate; also the administrator of such estate. All these witnesses knew Stuart Isaac Hoover well, although they had not seen him for 3 or 4 years. They were acquainted with his father and mother and brothers and sisters, and some of them with his grandparents. The uncle testified that the grandparents of Stuart Isaac Hoover were Thomas J. Hoover and Mary E. Hoover. All the witnesses recognized the photograph exhibited to them as that of Stuart Isaac Hoover, whom they knew. The same photograph was identified by witnesses in Ida County, who had met the plaintiff there and identified it unmistakably as his photograph. The photograph is reproduced in the record, and is very clear and apparently free from defects. The plaintiff offered no evidence in -denial or explanation of any of this testimony. As to Robert Leroy Hoover, the evidence is overwhelming that he was the only son of Mrs. McHugh. The testimony of his father’s relatives was without conflict.
“Plaintiff further states that one Eobert Leroy Hoover filed a contest resisting the probate of said purported will, and alleging and fraudulently representing himself to be a son and heir at law of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, whereas in truth and in fact he was not a son and not an heir at law of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased; that upon said false and fraudulent representations and assertions of the said Eobert Leroy Hoover as aforesaid, the said D. II. Hedrick did enter into a written agreement of settlement with the said Eobert Leroy Hoover, which agreement is on file in the matter of the estate of Margaret McHugh, deceased, and which settlement or agreement of settlement was approved by the court; that the said D. H. Hedrick, as executor or as residuary legatee under the said purported will of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, had no authority to make settlement with the said Eobert Leroy Hoover, and bind himself as executor of the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, to pay any sum or sums of money or any property belonging to the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, to the said Eobert Leroy Hoover, and that said agreement or agreements on the part of the said D. IT. Hedrick were without authority, and were and are void.
“Plaintiff further states that the records show, and therefore this plaintiff alleges, that one James A. Simmons, a brother of the said Margaret McHugh, filed a contest and resistance to the purported will and testament of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, and that the said D. H. Hedrick did enter into and execute an agreement of settlement with the said James A. Simmons, for a consideration therein named; that the consideration named in said release and agreement of settlement has been paid, according to the*1253 records, to the said James A. Simmons; that the said James A. Simmons is not an heir at law of the said Margaret Mc-IIngh, deceased; that the resistance and merits of his contest and the entire claim of the said James A. Simmons to a share in the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, was based upon fraud, in this, that he, the said James A. Simmons, stated that, prior to the death of the said Margaret McHugh, a contract or assignment had been executed between Margaret McHugh, deceased, and her alleged son, Robert Leroy Hoover; that the said claim of James A. Simmons to a share in said estate was based upon the fraudulent representations that Robert Leroy Hoover was a son of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, and that said representations of the said James A. Simmons are and were false; that the said D. H. Hedrick had no authority from court, and in law or equity had no right or authority to pay James A. Simmons in settlement of his said claim any part of the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased.
“Plaintiff further states that he finds, from reading the records filed in the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, that one J. H. Meyers, under a certain agreement of settlement, is to receive the sum of $15,000 from the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased; that the said D. H.‘ Hedrick, in law or in equity, has no right or authority whatsoever to pay to the said J. H. Meyers, or agree to pay to him, any sum or sums of money, or any property, from the estate of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, for tho rea.son that the said J. H. Meyers is not an heir at law of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased, and the said agreement to pay him money as aforesaid is without authority and is void.
“Plaintiff further states that his father was the only child of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased; that his said father is deceased, and at the time of his decease left no heirs surviving except this plaintiff, who, as such heir, under the statutes of Iowa, is the sole and only heir at law of the said Margaret McHugh, deceased.”
It will be noted that the plaintiff attacked the contract between Hedrick and Robert Leroy Hoover, and attacked the title of Robert Leroy Hoover thereunder, not on the ground that it must fail as a necessary effect of the setting aside of the will, but on the ground that it was obtained by false and fraudulent representations made by Robert Leroy Hoover that he was the son and heir of Margaret McHugh. "Whether conveyances made to a good-faith purchaser while the original probate of the will was in force and effect would necessarily be rendered void thereafter by the successful prosecution of an action to set aside the probate, we need not determine. It would be open, at least, to an alleged good-faith purchaser to contend otherwise, in such event. The plaintiff’s petition assumed thát such contention could be made, and it tendered an issue in advance that the contract of conveyance to Robert Leroy Hoover was obtained through fraud. It may be that the issue so tendered was premature, and that it was improperly joined with an action to set aside the probate of the will; but the defendants were not bound to assail it upon that ground. The jurisdiction of the court was not affected by the misjoinder. It was competent for the parties to ignore it, and for the defendants to join issue with the petition in all its parts, regardless of the misjoinder. Robert Leroy Hoover responded to this part of the petition, both defensively and with a counterclaim. In his counterclaim, he set forth a specific description of the land which he claimed to own by virtue of his contract with Hedrick. He alleged that the plaintiff was asserting an interest in such lands adverse to himself, and that 'such adverse claim was a cloud upon his title, and he prayed that his title be quieted. Not only in his petition did the plaintiff assail the title of Robert Leroy Hoover, but, in his answer to the counterclaim, he ad
In dismissing as to Robert Leroy Hoover, the plaintiff withdrew no allegation of his petition. Robert Leroy Hoover being a legatee under the will, it is doubtful at least whether the plaintiff could proceed with his contest without making such legatee a party defendant. Surely, this of itself would justify an order of the trial court requiring all such legatees to be served with notice, and to be thereby made defendants. Hedrick’s particular reason for wanting to bring in Robert Leroy Hoover was that the contract by which he had under
IV. It is further argued that the court usurped the functions of a jury in entering a decree, in that it precluded forever a jury trial on the issue of whether the probate of the will should be set aside.
We find beyond all doubt that the plaintiff’s claim of relationship to Mrs. McHugh was knowingly false, and the decree of "the district court, so far as it affects him, is — Affirmed.